内收肌管
医学
前交叉韧带
前交叉韧带重建术
麻醉
腘动脉
随机对照试验
膝关节痛
外科
骨关节炎
病理
替代医学
标识
DOI:10.1136/rapm-2023-esra.3
摘要
Please confirm that an ethics committee approval has been applied for or granted: Yes: I’m uploading the Ethics Committee Approval as a PDF file with this abstract submission Application for ESRA Abstract Prizes: I apply as an Anesthesiologist (Aged 35 years old or less) Background and Aims
Periarticular injections (PAIs) are becoming a component of multimodal joint pathways. Motor-sparing peripheral nerve blocks, such as the infiltration between the popliteal artery and capsule of the knee (IPACK) and the adductor canal block (ACB), may augment PAI in multimodal analgesic pathways for knee surgery, but supporting literature remains rare. We hypothesized that ACB and IPACK would lower pain on ambulation on postoperative day (POD) 1 compared to PAI alone. Methods
This triple-blinded randomized controlled trial included 50 patients undergoing ACL repair. Patients either received (1) a PAI (control group, n = 26) or (2) an iPACK with an ACB (intervention group, n = 24). The primary outcome was pain on ambulation on POD 1. Secondary outcomes included numeric rating scale (NRS) pain scores, patient satisfaction, and opioid consumption. Results
The intervention group reported significantly lower NRS pain scores on ambulation than the control group on POD 1 ( [95% confidence interval], -3.3 [-4.0 to -2.7]; P < .001). In addition, NRS pain scores on ambulation on POD 0 (-3.5 [-4.3 to -2.7]; P < .001) and POD 2 (-1.0 [-1.9 to -0.1]; P = .033) were significantly lower. Patients in the intervention group were more satisfied, had less opioid consumption (P = .005, post anesthesia care unit, P = .028, POD 0), less intravenous opioids (P < .001), and reduced need for intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (P = .037). Conclusions
The addition of iPACK and ACB significantly improves analgesia and reduces opioid consumption after ACL repair compared to PAI alone.
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